From Huizinga to Wittgenstein: A Philosophical Analysis of the Notions of Play, Games and Language-Games

Dissertation, State University of New York at Buffalo (1994)
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Abstract

The main purpose of this work is presenting a philosophical analysis of the general notion of play. This analysis starts from Huizinga's definition of the "play-concept" and is extended so as to include Wittgenstein's conception of language-games. By supplementing Huizinga's definition with a distinction between "play" and "game", as the two opposite components of that concept, I carry out an investigation of some of the interesting issues raised by his book. I focus especially on the relationship between the play-phenomenon and artistic experience and I develop Huizinga's suggestions regarding this point through an examination of past and modern conceptions of art. The results of this analysis are connected with Wittgenstein's notion of language-games. I find that this notion can be taken to emphasize the very character of integration that creative and appreciative experience in art show. Language-games, like artworks, demand and generate at the same time the need of communality, that is of customs

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